“Then you must give orders to the servants,”
Phipps insisted. “I don’t need to
suggest to you, Dredlinton,” he went on, “what
means you should use to make your wife obey you, but
there are means, and if you’re not the man to
realise them, I’m very much surprised in you.
I will begin with a concrete case. Your wife,
together with that fellow Wilshaw and Miss Baldwin,
have accepted an invitation from Wingate to dine and
go to a theatre to-morrow night. You must see
that your wife does not go.”

“Very well,” Dredlinton promised, “I’ll
manage it somehow.”

“See that you do,” Phipps enjoined earnestly.
“Your wife is one of those misguided women with
a strong sense of duty. Unless you behave like
a damn fool, you can reestablish some measure of control
over her. Do so. There are certain circumstances,”
he went on, his face wrinkled a little with emotion,
his voice deep and earnest, “there are certain
circumstances, Dredlinton, under which I might be inclined
to behave towards you with great generosity.
I leave you to guess what those circumstances are.
I will show you the way later on.”

Dredlinton felt hope stir once more through his shocked
and terrified senses. He lit a cigarette with
fingers which had ceased to tremble, leaned a little
back in his place and stared at his companion curiously.

“Phipps,” he asked, “what the devil
do you and this fellow Wingate see in my wife?”

“What a man like you would never look for,”
was the harsh reply.

CHAPTER XII

“Throw your coat down anywhere, Miss Baldwin,”
Wingate invited, as he ushered that young lady into
his rooms soon after eleven o’clock on the following
evening. “Now what can I give you?
There are some sandwiches here—­ham and
pate-de-foie-gras, I think. Whisky and soda or
some hock?”

“A pate sandwich and some plain soda water,
please,” Sarah replied, taking off the long
motoring coat which concealed her evening clothes.
“I have been fined for everything except disorderly
driving—­daren’t risk that. Thanks!”
she went on. “What ripping sandwiches!
And quite a good play, wasn’t it?”

“I am glad you enjoyed it.”

“It was a swindle Josephine not turning up,”
Sarah continued, as she stretched herself out in Wingate’s
easy-chair. “Domestic ructions again, I
suppose. How I do hate that husband of hers!”